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Foster, Abby Kelley, 1811-1887

LC control no.n 91017665
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingFoster, Abby Kelley, 1811-1887
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Variant(s)Kelley, Abby, 1811-1887
Kelly, Abby, 1811-1887
Foster, Abigail Kelley, 1811-1887
Kelley, Abigail, 1811-1887
Foster, S. S. Mrs., 1811-1887
Foster, Stephen Symonds, Mrs., 1811-1887
Associated countryUnited States
Birth date1811-01-15
Death date1887-01-14
Place of birthPelham (Mass.)
Place of deathWorcester (Mass.)
AffiliationFemale Anti-Slavery Society of Lynn American Anti-Slavery Society
Profession or occupationLecturers Abolitionists
Found inThe Liberty Bell, 1858: p. 21 (Abby Kelley Foster)
Sterling, D. Abby Kelley, 1991: CIP t.p. (Abby Kelley) galley (abolitionist moneyraiser and organizer)
Burkett, N. Abby Kelley Foster and Stephen S. Foster, 1976: p. 10 (Abigail Kelley born in Pelham, Mass. on 1/15/1811)
Notable Amer. women (Foster, Abigail Kelley; abolitionist and woman's rights lecturer; married Stephen Symonds Foster 12/21/1845; b. 1/15/1810; d. 1/14/1887)
MWA/NAIP files (hdg.: Foster, Abby Kelley, 1811-1887; usage: Abby Kelley Foster; Abby Kelly Foster; Abby Kelly; Abby Kelley; variant: Mrs. S.S. Foster; Mrs. Stephen Symonds Foster: note: birth date of 1810 given in many printed secondary sources but on the verso of her wedding certificate, now with her papers at the Worcester Historical Museum, she wrote in her own hand that she was born 1/15/1811 in Pelham, Mass.; according to her obituary, died in Worcester, 1/14/1887, a day before her 76th birthday)
Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619-1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass, accessed January 22, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Foster, Abby Kelley; social reformer, abolitionist, women's rights advocate, lecturer; born 15 January 1811 in Pelham, Massachusetts, United States; graduated from a Friends' school in Rhode Island (1829); secretary and director of the Lynn Female Society, an antislavery organization for women; was encouraged by Garrison and Theodore Dwight Weld to join the antislavery cause as lecturer (1839); was possibly the first woman after the GrimkeĢ sisters to speak before mixed audiences; at forefront of the controversial American Anti-Slavery Society (AASS), nominated for a position on the business committee (1840); helped found the National Anti-Slavery Standard and the Anti-Slavery Bugle in Salem, Ohio; general agent at the AASS (1857); defended the right of African American members to vote at the annual meeting of the Equal Rights Association (1867); worked on passing the Fifteenth Amendment; died 14 January 1887 in Worcester, Massachusetts, United States)